Theologian's Almanac for Week of June 20, 2021

 

Welcome to SALT’s “Theologian’s Almanac,” a weekly selection of important birthdays, holidays, and other upcoming milestones worth marking — specially created for a) writing sermons and prayers, b) creating content for social media channels, and c) enriching your devotional life.

For the week of Sunday, June 20:

June 20 is Father’s Day, the third Sunday in June each year, a holiday with roots in two early-twentieth-century occasions: a commemoration for fathers killed in the December 1907 explosion at a West Virginia coal company, and a 1910 celebration inspired by a Civil War veteran and widower who raised six children on a farm in Washington State. Happy Father’s Day!

June 21 is the traditional first day of summer (though this year the summer solstice technically will happen at 11:58pm EST on June 20). What makes for summer’s heat isn’t Earth’s distance from the sun (we’re actually three million miles farther away than we are at the closest point in the planet’s orbit), but rather the tilt of Earth’s axis. For this section of our orbit, since the Northern Hemisphere is tilted toward the sun, we spend more time each day on the sunlit side of the planet, receiving more direct rays of light. It’s the length of summer days, then, the long daily dose of more direct sun, that makes the flowers grow and the mercury rise. And why are we tilted at all? Likely because of a primeval collision with another planet-like body, perhaps the same collision that created the Moon. Happy Summer!

June 24 is Midsummer Night or “Midsummer Eve,” a time of revelry also known as St. John’s Eve, the day before John the Baptist’s birthday. St. John is the patron saint of beekeepers, and this time of year, many beehives are brimming with honey. In fact, this month’s full moon has historically been called “the Mead Moon,” since honey was gathered and fermented to make mead — hence the term, “honeymoon.” In a time when the essential work of bees and other pollinators is increasingly appreciated, even as bee populations are in alarming decline, celebrating St. John — who lived in the wilderness, preaching justice and eating “wild honey” (Matthew 3:4) — is more important than ever.

June 24 is also the birthday of St. John of the Cross, the mystic and poet born in Spain in 1542. He grew up in an impoverished family, and in his youth worked at a hospital for the destitute in order to contribute to his household’s income. Eventually, mentored by St. Teresa of Ávila, he sought to reform the Carmelite order — and was arrested and publicly punished for his efforts. He wrote poetry in prison, however, and today is widely considered one of Spain’s greatest poets; among his most famous works are “Spiritual Canticle” and “Dark Night of the Soul.” The patron saint of mystics, contemplatives, and Spanish poets, St. John wrote, “They can be like the sun, words. / They can do for the heart what light can for a field.”